Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P11021 (BiP)
2,049 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

ATF6, a 670 amino acid endoplasmic reticulum (ER) transmembrane glycoprotein with the electrophoretic mobility of a 90 kDa protein, is a key transcriptional activator of the unfolded protein response (UPR) that allows mammalian cells to maintain cellular homeostasis when the cells are subjected to a variety of environmental and physiological stress. Previous studies have established that ATF6 is a short-lived protein, the activation of which involves relocation from the ER to the Golgi where it is cleaved by the S1P/S2P protease system to generate a nuclear form that acts as a transcriptional activator for ER-stress inducible target genes such as Grp78/BiP. We report here that in addition to this process, ER-stress mediated by thapsigargin triggers an acute proteasomal degradation of the pre-existing pool of p90ATF6 independent of S1P/S2P cleavage. We showed that ATF6 is a direct target of proteasome-ubiquitin pathway, and this process can be suppressed by proteasome inhibitors, ALLN and MG115. We further observed that in non-stressed cells, p90ATF6 can be stabilized by MG115 but not ALLN and that treatment of cells with MG115 results in Grp78 induction in the absence of ER stress. These studies suggest that ER-stress induced acute, transit degradation of p90ATF6 could represent a novel cellular defense mechanism to prevent premature cell death resulting from p90ATF6 activation. Further, inhibition of proteasome activity can result in chaperone protein gene induction through stabilization of p90ATF6 as well as accumulation of malfolded proteins.
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PMID:Endoplasmic reticulum stress triggers an acute proteasome-dependent degradation of ATF6. 1521 70

Proteins synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of eukaryotic cells must be folded correctly before translocation out of the ER. Disruption of protein folding results in the induction of genes for ER-resident chaperones, for example, BiP. This phenomenon is known as the ER stress response. We report here that bZIP60, an Arabidopsis thaliana basic leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factor with a transmembrane domain, is involved in the ER stress response. When compared with wild-type Arabidopsis plants, homozygous bzip60 mutant plants show a markedly weaker induction of many ER stress-responsive genes. The bZIP60 protein resides in the ER membrane under unstressed condition and is cleaved in response to ER stress caused by either tunicamycin or DTT. The N-terminal fragment containing the bZIP domain is then translocated into the nucleus. Cleavage of bZIP60 is independent of the function of Arabidopsis homologs of mammalian S1P and S2P proteases, which mediate the proteolytic cleavage of the mammalian transcription factor ATF6. In Arabidopsis, expression of the bZIP60 gene and cleavage of the bZIP60 protein are observed in anthers in the absence of stress treatment, suggesting that the ER stress response functions in the normal development of active secretory cells.
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PMID:Arabidopsis bZIP60 is a proteolysis-activated transcription factor involved in the endoplasmic reticulum stress response. 1981 35